首页
登录
职称英语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading
游客
2025-02-15
2
管理
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
The growth of intelligence
No one doubts that intelligence develops as children grow older. Yet the concept of intelligence has proved both quite difficult to define in unambiguous terms and unexpectedly controversial in some respects. Although, at one level, there seem to be almost as many definitions of intelligence as people who have tried to define it, there is broad agreement on two key features. That is, intelligence involves the capacity not only to learn from experience but also to adapt to one’s environment. However, we cannot leave the concept there. Before turning to what is known about the development of intelligence, it is necessary to consider whether we are considering the growth of one or many skills. That question has been tackled in rather different ways by psychometricians and by developmentalists.
The former group has examined the issue by determining how children’s abilities on a wide range of tasks intercorrelate, or go together. Statistical techniques have been used to find out whether the patterns are best explained by one broad underlying capacity, general intelligence, or by a set of multiple, relatively separate, special skills in domains such as verbal and visuospatial ability. While it cannot be claimed that everyone agrees on what the results mean, most people now accept that for practical purposes it is reasonable to suppose that both are involved. In brief, the evidence in favour of some kind of general intellectual capacity is that people who are superior(or inferior)on one type of task tend also to be superior(or inferior)on others. Moreover, general measures of intelligence tend to have considerable powers to predict a person’s performance on a wide range of tasks requiring special skills. Nevertheless, it is plain that it is not at all uncommon for individuals to be very good at some sorts of task and yet quite poor at some others.
Furthermore the influences that affect verbal skills are not quite the same as those that affect other skills.
This approach to investigating intelligence is based on the nature of the task involved, but studies of age-related changes show that this is not the only, or necessarily the most important, approach. For instance, some decades ago, Horn and Cattell argued for a differentiation between what they termed ’fluid’ and ’crystallised’ intelligence. Fluid abilities are best assessed by tests that require mental manipulation of abstract symbols. Crystallised abilities, by contrast, reflect knowledge of the environment in which we live and past experience of similar tasks; they may be assessed by tests of comprehension and information. It seems that fluid abilities peak in early adult life, whereas crystallised abilities increase up to advanced old age.
Developmental studies also show that the interconnections between different skills vary with age. Thus in the first year of life an interest in perceptual patterns is a major contributor to cognitive abilities, whereas verbal abilities are more important later on. These findings seemed to suggest a substantial lack of continuity between infancy and middle childhood. However, it is important to realise that the apparent discontinuity will vary according to which of the cognitive skills were assessed in infancy. It has been found that tests of coping with novelty do predict later intelligence. These findings reinforce the view that young children’s intellectual performance needs to be assessed from their interest in and curiosity about the environment, and the extent to which this is applied to new situations, as well as by standardised intelligence testing.
These psychometric approaches have focused on children’s increase in cognitive skills as they grow older. Piaget brought about a revolution in the approach to cognitive development through his arguments(backed up by observations)that the focus should be on the thinking processes involved rather than on levels of cognitive achievement. These ideas of Piaget gave rise to an immense body of research and it would be true to say that subsequent thinking has been heavily dependent on his genius in opening up new ways of thinking about cognitive development. Nevertheless, most of his concepts have had to be so radically revised, or rejected, that his theory no longer provides an appropriate basis for thinking about cognitive development. To appreciate why that is so, we need to focus on some rather different elements of Piaget’s theorising.
The first element, which has stood the test of time, is his view that the child is an active agent of learning and of the importance of this activity in cognitive development. Numerous studies have shown how infants actively scan their environment; how they prefer patterned to non-patterned objects, how they choose novel over familiar stimuli, and how they explore their environment as if to see how it works. Children’s questions and comments vividly illustrate the ways in which they are constantly constructing schemes of what they know and trying out their ideas of how to fit new knowledge into those schemes or deciding that the schemes need modification. Moreover, a variety of studies have shown that active experiences have a greater effect on learning than comparable passive experiences. However, a second element concerns the notion that development proceeds through a series of separate stages that have to be gone through step-by-step, in a set order, each of which is characterised by a particular cognitive structure. That has turned out to be a rather misleading way of thinking about cognitive development, although it is not wholly wrong.
Questions 27-30
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write your answers in boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet. [br] Most researchers accept that one feature of intelligence is the ability to
选项
A、change our behaviour according to our situation.
B、react to others’ behaviour patterns.
C、experiment with environmental features.
D、cope with unexpected setbacks.
答案
A
解析
The first paragraph says ’intelligence involves the capacity ... to adapt to one’s environment’. Distraction B: There is no suggestion in the text that we change behaviour according to what other people do; C: The word ’environment’ is used in this text in a more abstract way, i.e. ’surroundings’; D: Although the text states that the ’capacity ... to learn from experience’ is one feature of intelligence and we can suppose that coping with ’unexpected setbacks’ would be one outcome of learning from experience, which is one feature of intelligence, this is not stated anywhere in the text.
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3958113.html
相关试题推荐
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions27-40,whicharebasedonReading
Lookatthefollowingstatements(Questions19-23)andthelistofpeoplebelow.M
Lookatthefollowingstatements(Questions19-23)andthelistofpeoplebelow.M
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
随机试题
[originaltext]W:Welcometojoinus,Hank.M:Thankyou.(17)Ihavedonethiski
【S1】[br]【S7】D副词辨义题[考频:7]。空格位于take之后,介词短语intheprocess之前,需要副词。该句意为:我想这里的关键是要认真
拆除工程的建设单位与施工单位在签订施工合同时,应签订()协议,明确双方的安全管理
人口采集处理和利用业务属于(),营业执照错发属于(作答此空),户籍管理属于(
根据《商业银行资本管理办法(试行)》的规定,我国商业银行的逆周期资本要求由(
拍卖行应在拍卖日的( )前以登报或通过电视等媒体公告的形式发布关于该房地产拍卖
国家对最低生活保障家庭中有劳动能力,并处于失业状态的成员,给予就业帮助。根据《社
现需设计一个无黏性土的简单边坡。已知边坡高度为10m,土的内摩擦角φ=45°,黏
搜查时,必须有被搜查人或者他的家属、邻居或者其他见证人在场。( )
关于雇用临时员工的不利情况的说法错误的是( )。A.具有较高的灵活性 B.临
最新回复
(
0
)